More than 300 people were injured when two passenger trains crashed in South Africa yesterday.
Johannesburg
emergency services spokeswoman Nana Radebe said the injured were rushed
to nearby hospitals with minor to serious injuries. No fatalities were
reported.
“For now we have removed people with minor to serious injuries, but none critical,” she said.
Firefighters searched for commuters who may have been trapped inside the train cars.
The
trains were on the same track near Booysens station, Radebe said, and
it appeared that a travelling train collided with a stationary train.
“What
we do know is that one vehicle rear-ended the other,” said Russel
Meiring, a spokesman for ER24, a private emergency service.
In
dark, cold conditions, emergency workers carried badly injured people to
dozens of waiting ambulances as shocked passengers sat on the ground
and were treated for minor injuries.

Some passengers were given medical care inside the wrecked carriages before being lifted down a steep embankment on stretchers.
The
crash happened at the height of the evening rush hour when the trains
were packed with people travelling from Johannesburg city centre to the
township of Soweto.
“The one train had stopped because of a
signal when another came from behind us hooting and smashed into its
back,” a commuter told the African News Agency.
The cause of the
accident was unknown and authorities were still gathering information
about the collision, Metrorail spokeswoman Lillian Mofokeng said.
“Our priority right now is just to attend to the injured and then arrange alternative transport,” she said.
About 100 passengers who were uninjured were taken home in buses, said Mofokeng.
In
April, two passenger trains collided south of Johannesburg, killing the
conductor of one of the trains and injuring 241 people.